MERRILL - A 24-year-old Tomahawk man accused of stabbing another man 11 times and then trying to run him over with a truck had his bond lowered in Lincoln County Circuit Court Tuesday.

Cody J. Jenson was ordered held on a $100,000 cash bond when he made his first court appearance July 10. Lincoln County Circuit Judge Jay Tlusty, who set the original bond, lowered it to $50,000 cash on Aug. 14. Tuesday, Tlusty reduced the bond to a $40,000 signature bond and a $40,000 surety bond, according to court records. A surety bond requires someone to sign an agreement to pay the bond amount, if the defendant violates the conditions of the bond.

Tlusty ordered Jenson, who is charged with attempted homicide, to live with his mother, refrain from consuming alcohol and not leave the Lincoln, Oneida and Marathon county area. Tlusty also gave Jenson a curfew from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m.

Jenson is accused of attacking a man from the town of Bradley near Tomahawk, after the two argued over a woman, according to court reports.

According to court documents:

Jenson drove to the home of the Bradley man, who came out of his house and punched out the back window of Jenson's truck. As the two men punched each other, Jenson pulled out what appeared to be a hunting knife with a 4-inch blade and began stabbing the other man, who couldn't get away because he was bleeding badly.

A neighbor, who heard the noise and went outside to check it out, told investigators that Jenson then got in the truck and aimed the front of the vehicle at the victim laying on the ground.

The neighbor, who by that time was with the victim, stood up and shouted at Jenson that the man was dead. Jenson then squealed his tires to a stop, waited a few moments and drove off. The neighbor helped the victim, who was not dead but bleeding badly.

The victim's stab wounds included cuts to his arm, shoulder, diaphragm and liver, according to court documents.

Police found messages on the woman's phone from Jenson that said, "I'm going to slit his throat; he's bleeding out and it's all your fault." Police also found messages on the victim's phone that said "you want more?" and "I'm coming to where you live."

In addition to attempted homicide, Jenson is charged with recklessly causing injury, recklessly endangering safety, felony battery and misdemeanor bail jumping. If convicted on all counts, Jenson faces a maximum of more than 113 years in prison. Jenson previously pleaded not guilty to all charges.